Part 1
Examiner
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Candidate
Yes, I had a bike when I was a child. That is bicycle.
Examiner
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Candidate
Yes, bikes are popular in my country because in childhood every child like to ride bicycle in in their free time.
Did you have a bike when you were a child?
Score: 62.0Suggestion: Make your answer more natural and fluent by using a clear topic sentence, correcting grammar, avoiding redundancy, and adding one brief supporting detail. Use contraction and a definite/indefinite article properly. Keep it under five sentences.
Example: Yes, I had a bicycle when I was a child. I used to ride it to visit my friends and explore nearby parks, which helped me feel independent and confident.
Do you think bikes are popular in your country?
Score: 58.0Suggestion: Improve grammar (subject-verb agreement and articles), remove repetition, and give a specific reason or example. Begin with a clear topic sentence, then add one or two concise supporting details connected with a linking word (e.g., because, for example).
Example: Yes, bicycles are very popular in my country because many people use them for short trips and children often ride them after school. For example, on weekends you can see families cycling in parks and along neighborhood streets.
× That is bicycle.
✓ That is a bicycle.
The sentence is missing the indefinite article 'a' before the singular countable noun 'bicycle'. In English, singular countable nouns usually require an article (a/an/the). Use 'a' because this is the first mention and any single bicycle is meant. Suggestion: before singular countable nouns use 'a' or 'an' when speaking generally or introducing them for the first time.
× in childhood every child like to ride bicycle in in their free time.
✓ in childhood every child likes to ride a bicycle in their free time.
There are multiple issues: 1) Subject-verb agreement: the singular subject 'every child' requires the third-person singular verb form 'likes' not 'like'. 2) Article error: 'bicycle' is a singular countable noun and needs an article 'a'. 3) Repetition and word order: the phrase had 'in in' duplicated; keep only one 'in'. 4) Pronoun usage: 'their' is acceptable as a singular gender-neutral pronoun in informal contexts, so it can remain. Suggestion: change 'like' to 'likes', add 'a' before 'bicycle', remove the extra 'in'. Also consider adjusting word order to 'When I was a child, every child liked...' if you want past reference.
× Yes, I had a bike when I was a child.
✓ Yes, I had a bike when I was a child.
No correction needed for tense here. The past simple 'had' correctly matches the time reference 'when I was a child'. Keep as is.
× Yes, bikes are popular in my country because in childhood every child like to ride bicycle in in their free time.
✓ Yes, bikes are popular in my country because, in childhood, every child likes to ride a bicycle in their free time.
Main issue already addressed in a focused sentence above but for this full-sentence response: ensure subject-verb agreement ('every child likes'), add article 'a' before 'bicycle', remove duplicate 'in', and add commas for clarity. The present simple 'are popular' correctly expresses a general truth about current popularity.